388 research outputs found
Close-circuit domain quadruplets in BaTiO nanorods embedded in SrTiO film
Cylindrical BaTiO3 nanorods embedded in (100)-oriented SrTiO3 epitaxial film
in a brush-like configuration are investigated in the framework of the
Ginzburg-Landau-Devonshire model. It is shown that strain compatibility at
BaTiO3/SrTiO3 interfaces keeps BaTiO3 nanorods in the rhombohedral phase even
at room temperature. Depolarization field at the BaTiO3/SrTiO3 interfaces is
reduced by an emission of the 109-degree or 71-degree domain boundaries. In
case of nanorods of about 10-80 nm diameter, the ferroelectric domains are
found to form a quadruplet with a robust flux-closure arrangement of the
in-plane components of the spontaneous polarization. The out-of-plane
components of the polarization are either balanced or oriented up or down along
the nanorod axis. Switching of the out-of-plane polarization with coercive
field of about V/m occurs as a collapse of a 71-degree cylindrical
domain boundary formed at the curved circumference surface of the nanorod. The
remnant domain quadruplet configuration is chiral, with the macroscopic
symmetry. More complex stable domain configurations with coexisting clockwise
and anticlockwise quadruplets contain interesting arrangement of strongly
curved 71-degree boundaries.Comment: Erratta - corrected error in Fig.
Origin of the "Waterfall" Effect in Phonon Dispersion of Relaxor Perovskites
Inelastic neutron scattering study of the perovskite relaxor ferroelectric
PZN:8%PT elucidates the origin of the previously reported unusual kink on the
low frequency transverse phonon dispersion curve (known as "waterfall" effect).
We show that its position depends on the choice of the Brillouin zone and that
the relation of its position to the size of the polar nanoregions is highly
improbable. The observation is explained in the framework of a simple model of
coupled damped harmonic oscillators representing the acoustic and optic phonon
branches.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, LaTe
Phonons in MgB2 by Polarized Raman Scattering on Single Crystals
The paper presents detailed Raman scattering study of the unusually broad E2g
phonon mode in MgB2 crystal. For the first time, it is shown by the polarized
Raman scattering on few-micron-size crystallites with natural faces that the
observed broad Raman feature really does obey the selection rules of an E2g
mode. Raman spectra on high quality polycrystalline superconducting MgB2 wires
reveal a very symmetric E2g phonon line near 615 1/cm with the room temperature
linewidth of 260 1/cm only. Additional scattering of different polarization
dependence, observed in certain crystallites is interpreted as weighted phonon
density of states induced by lattice imperfections.Comment: 4 pages + 7 figure
LiBC by polarized Raman spectroscopy: Evidence for lower crystal symmetry ?
The paper presents polarized Raman scattering study on a few-micron-size
crystallite of LiBC with natural faces. The experiment on as grown sample has
revealed a four lattice modes with frequencies at 1276 cm^-1, 830 cm^-1, 546
cm^-1 and 170 cm^-1, respectively. The number of observed Raman lines and their
selection rules are incompatible with the assumed D6h symmetry. The modes at
1276 cm^-1 and 170 cm^-1 correspond to the expected Raman active modes. In
contrast with the superconducting compound MgB2, the B-C bond stretching mode
(at 1276 cm^-1) has rather small damping. The two "forbidden" modes (at 830
cm^-1 and 546 cm^-1) disappeared after subsequent thermal treatment.Comment: 4 pages, LaTeX, complementary experimental resul
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